Answer:
D. The stake in the saint's heart represents the Reformation.
Explanation:
Pieter Bruegel's <em>the Elder's Battle Between Carnival and Lent </em>showed different symbols as used in the painting EXCEPT The stake in the saint's heart represents the Reformation.
His paintings is rich in allegories and symbols that depict the triumph of Lent, also showing the Carnival with the figure bidding farewell with his left hand with his hands lifted to the sky.
Also in the painting, there is another figure of a large man riding on a barrel with something attached to his front. He wears a meat pie as a headdress, wielding a spit along with the head of a pig bracing for a fight.
Answer:
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Explanation:
The discovery of coyolxauhqui's stone monolith showed her decapitated body. It is naked with monsters at her joints. Her head wears a feathered head dress adorned with balls and bells. She wears elaborate earrings, fancy sandals and bracelets and a serpent belt. This monolith at the bottom of the temple signifies the defeat of Coyolxauhqui by her sibling Huitzilopochtli. As coyolxauhqui's body was thrown off the mountain and consequently her body broke to pieces, thus is the symbolism behind the monolith.
Answer:
Explanation: Because they believed the cat was their protector from evil spirits. Regarded in the highest of esteem, feline figure, such as Mafdet, Bastet and Sekhmet, represented justice, fertility and power. Egyptians were usually embalmed (mummified) with a feline. These practices began to dissipate by the 16th century.